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Date: | Fri, 17 Dec 1999 13:42:33 +0000 |
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Apologies for cross posting
Fields of Conflict:
Progress and Prospect in Battlefield
Archaeology
An International Conference
Dept. of Archaeology, University of Glasgow
15th-16th April, 2000
(note change from Feb as previously advertised)
Hosted by
Dept. of Archaeology, University of Glasgow
Dept. of Archaeology, University of Liverpool
and
Scottish Centre for War Studies, University of Glasgow
We are pleased to present the provisional programme
and invite registration for the first ever international
conference devoted to battlefield archaeology
Booking forms are now available from:
Battlefields Conference,
GUARD,
Dept. of Archaeology,
University of Glasgow,
Glasgow G12 8QQ
A set of abstracts can be provided as an e-mail
attachment from: [log in to unmask]
Provisional list of speakers and papers
(Session groupings may be subject to change)
Ancient and medieval warfare
John Lee (USA) Urban combat at Olynthos, 348 BC
Tim Sutherland (UK) The Rings of the Lords: Non military artefacts as
battlefield indicators
Anthea Boylston (UK) The anthropology of a mass grave from the battle of
Towton, 1461
Patrick Parsons (UK) Flodden Field: the sources and archaeology of ‘a
marvelouse great conflicte'
Post Medieval British Warfare
Colin Martin (UK) Artillery and other battlefield weapons from shipwrecks
of the 16th and 17th centuries
Ross MacKenzie (UK) Culloden: the battlefield as palimpsest - changing
interpretations 1745-2000
American Civil War & earlier North American conflicts
Lawrence Babits (USA) ‘Book Archaeology’ of the Cowpens battlefield
William B. Lees (USA) Reconnecting with the hallowed ground of the
American Civil War
Michael Wilkins (USA) A Post-processual archaeology of the American
Civil War
Martha Tempkin (USA) The Best Farm: An Examination of a Civil War
Agricultural Landscape
Stephen Potter (USA) “These pictures have a terrible distinctness”: Using
battlefield images and computer visualisation
techniques to study cultural landscapes
Charles M. Haecker (USA) The official explanation versus the archaeological
record of a US-Mexican War battle
North American Indian Wars
Douglas G. Scott (USA) Battlefield Archaeology: Patterns of combat in the
American Indian Wars
Gerald R.Gates (USA)
& Susan Bain (UK) The Post Civil War Battlefield Pattern: A Modoc
War example
Gerald R. Gates (USA) Relocating the battle of Scorpion Point: A passport
in Time Project -1998
Christopher D. Adams
& Diane E. White (USA) Archaeological views of the Mescalero Apache
Indian warfare period of the American Southwest
Siege warfare
Glenn Foard (UK) The archaeological potential of battlefields and siege
sites of the English Civil War
Paul Courtney (UK) The archaeology of the early modern siege
Neil Price (Sweden) &
Viveka Londahl (Sweden) Bomarsund: archaeology and heritage management
at the site of a Crimean War Siege
Tony Pollard &
Ian Knight (UK) “Place Ekowe in a state of defence”: The archaeology of
an Anglo-Zulu War fort
Twentieth Century warfare
Peter Doyle (UK) &
Matthew R. Bennett (UK) Geology as a tool for reinterpreting Great War
battle sites
Mike Anderton (UK) Battlezone UK - the human face of a larger than life
battlefield
Jeffrey T. McGovern (USA) The materiality of conflict in 20th century
Ireland
Vincent Holyoak (UK) The archaeology of British Military aviation: Airfields as
battlefields
Research and Management of battlefield sites
John Carman (UK) Beyond military archaeology: battlefields as a research
resource
Anne MacSween (UK) Preserving Scotland’s battlefields: powers practices and
possibilities
Hugh MacBrien (UK) The preservation of smaller battlefields: skirmishes in
the planning system
Andy Brown (UK) Towards a research agenda for battlefield archaeology
D. Panton, A. Powter,
A. Jankowski, N. Bull
& J. Zvonor (Canada) Lest we forget: Preserving meaning and emotion
through battlefield terrain
Tony Pollard (UK) & Len
Van Schkalkwyk (S Africa) The Little Big Horn of Africa: Isandlwana and the
Anglo-Zulu War Archaeological Project
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